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Editors’ Picks Features Topics Best Of 2018
Longreads
What Should Universal Basic Income Look Like?
By Livia Gershon Feature

Andrew Yang made it news, but we need a better plan.

Friends: We Need Your Help
to Fund More Stories

Bundyville: The Remnant

What if we told you that in the summer of 2016, in a rural Western town, there was a bombing you never heard about?
Explore the stories and podcast
‘People Can Become Houses’
By Danielle Jackson Feature

In her debut memoir, Sarah Broom builds her “obsession” with her family home — destroyed in 2005 by Hurricane Katrina — into a story of how families decide who they are, how they got here, and how they reconstruct themselves over and over again.

Shelved: The Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band’s “Brain Opera”
By Tom Maxwell Feature

What happens when you’re not different just for the sake of being different.

Grandiose and Claustrophobic: ‘Prozac Nation’ Turns 25
By Anne Thériault Feature

Elizabeth Wurtzel’s bestseller is deeply rooted in a specific, Gen-X cultural moment. Can it still speak to us in 2019?

Wear your Longreads love on your sleeve. Literally.

Visit the Store

The Longreads Podcast

Our new weekly podcast, dedicated to helping people find and share the best storytelling in the world.

Latest Picks

All Hail Veruca Salt: The Oral History of American Thighs
By Alex McLevy  / The AV Club
In the Ring With India’s Most Powerful Woman
By Sonia Faleiroi  / The Economist
The Bread Thread
By Emily Weitzman  / Longreads
Dark Crystals: The Brutal Reality Behind a Booming Wellness Craze
By Tess McClure  / The Guardian
I Went to Wyoming to Get My MFA and It Gave My Life Back to Me
By Jenny Tinghui Zhang  / Catapult
Heel Turns
By Irina Dumitrescu  / The Times Literary Supplement
Breathe
By Jerald Walker  / New England Review
All Along the Waterfront
By Oluwatosin Adeshokan  / Off Assignment
How to Predict the Unpredictable
By Katie Gutierrez  / Longreads
The Nepali Women Who Deliver Birth Control by Hiking
By Atul Bhattarai  / Outside
View more

Latest Posts

Your Healing Crystals Are Part of the Capitalist Exploitation Machine
By Aaron Gilbreath Highlight

Healing crystals move from poor villages to first world consumers along a trail of death, ecological destruction, and capitalistic concentration of wealth.

The Bread Thread
By Emily Weitzman Feature

Emily Weitzman condemns the persistence of slut shaming over different stages in her life, and combats it with humor and…bread.

A Close Look at the Thing We Call ‘Celebrity’
By Aaron Gilbreath Highlight

Why do we care about famous people?

I Will Outlive My Cat: A Reading List on Pet Death
By Alison Fishburn Reading List

Alison Fishburn shares seven longreads on how humans experience the death of their pets.

Where Am I?
By Longreads Feature

After a lifetime of alienation, one woman discovered how her spacial disorientation could be a gift that connected her to strangers and made her less alone.

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Sign up to get the week’s best Longreads delivered to your inbox every Friday afternoon.

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How to Predict the Unpredictable
By Katie Gutierrez Feature

After the death of her dog, Katie Gutierrez grapples with the ripple effects of her decisions — and how to live with uncertainty as a mother.

Downsizing the American Black Middle Class
By Bryce Covert Feature

Government jobs helped thousands of Black families move into the middle class. Now, increasing calls for government privatization are pushing them back out.

Editor’s Roundtable: Fans, ‘Grams and Installment Plans
By Longreads Commentary

Longreads editors discuss recent stories in Inc., The Cut, and The Baffler.

The Top 5 Longreads of the Week
By Longreads Weekly Top 5

This week, we’re sharing stories from Emily Giambalvo, Maureen Tkacik, Zuzana Justman, Jennifer Colville, and Roshani Chokshi.

Cahiers du Post-Cinéma
By Soraya Roberts Feature

The movie theater was once a kind of lay church, with festivals like TIFF serving as annual religious holidays — until new houses of worship opened online.

View more posts

Popular Posts

Cut From the Same Cloth
By Myfanwy Tristram Feature

Artist Myfanwy Tristram was irritated by her teenage daughter’s extreme fashions — until she took an illustrated journey into their origins.

Shelved: Van Morrison’s Contractual Obligation Album
By Tom Maxwell Feature

This is the sound of not really trying.

The Myth of Making It
By Soraya Roberts Feature

If the most financially and critically successful artists don’t feel successful, maybe there’s something wrong with how we think about success.

Paul Clarke Wants to Live
By Rebecca Tan Feature

When a promising student left a neighborhood full of heroin for the University of Pennsylvania, it should have been a moving story. But what does an at-risk student actually need to thrive — or even just to survive?

How Google Discovered the Value of Surveillance
By Longreads Feature

In 2002, still reeling from the dot-com crash, Google realized they’d been harvesting a very valuable raw material — your behavior.

McDreamy, McSteamy, and McConnell
By Samuel Ashworth Feature

Congressional fan fiction is real, it’s glorious, and it might be reshaping our political world.

Books

Grandiose and Claustrophobic: ‘Prozac Nation’ Turns 25
By Anne Thériault Feature

Elizabeth Wurtzel’s bestseller is deeply rooted in a specific, Gen-X cultural moment. Can it still speak to us in 2019?

Regarding the Interpretation of Others
By Patrick Nathan Feature

When attempting to write a review of the official Susan Sontag biography, our reviewer finds himself on shaky ground after learning new information about the author.

This Month in Books: ‘I Don’t Want To Become a Giant Insect!’
By Dana Snitzky Commentary

This month’s books newsletter is a bodily affair.

Communiqué from an Exurban Satellite Clinic of a Cancer Pavilion Named after a Financier
By Longreads Feature

Anne Boyer encounters a familiar system — that grand and easy-to-mistake-for-everything system — at the cancer pavilion.

Tramp Like Us
By Longreads Feature

Can an American family learn to become outdoorsy in New Zealand, where the natural world is part of the national DNA? Sort of.

View all

Current Events

What Should Universal Basic Income Look Like?
By Livia Gershon Feature

Andrew Yang made it news, but we need a better plan.

Downsizing the American Black Middle Class
By Bryce Covert Feature

Government jobs helped thousands of Black families move into the middle class. Now, increasing calls for government privatization are pushing them back out.

Editor’s Roundtable: Fans, ‘Grams and Installment Plans
By Longreads Commentary

Longreads editors discuss recent stories in Inc., The Cut, and The Baffler.

How Thailand’s Rich Escape Prosecution
By Aaron Gilbreath Highlight

Thailand’s criminal justice system is plauged by an accepted double standard, where corruption prevails.

McDreamy, McSteamy, and McConnell
By Samuel Ashworth Feature

Congressional fan fiction is real, it’s glorious, and it might be reshaping our political world.

View all

Essays & Criticism

What Should Universal Basic Income Look Like?
By Livia Gershon Feature

Andrew Yang made it news, but we need a better plan.

The Bread Thread
By Emily Weitzman Feature

Emily Weitzman condemns the persistence of slut shaming over different stages in her life, and combats it with humor and…bread.

Grandiose and Claustrophobic: ‘Prozac Nation’ Turns 25
By Anne Thériault Feature

Elizabeth Wurtzel’s bestseller is deeply rooted in a specific, Gen-X cultural moment. Can it still speak to us in 2019?

How to Predict the Unpredictable
By Katie Gutierrez Feature

After the death of her dog, Katie Gutierrez grapples with the ripple effects of her decisions — and how to live with uncertainty as a mother.

Cahiers du Post-Cinéma
By Soraya Roberts Feature

The movie theater was once a kind of lay church, with festivals like TIFF serving as annual religious holidays — until new houses of worship opened online.

View all
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